Posts Tagged ‘ long exposures ’

Andy Katz, Wine’s Premier Photographer

Posted in Location Photography, Long Exposures, Outdoor Photography, landscape photography on March 29th, 2010 by Ron Egatz – 5 Comments Tags: , , , ,

Although his photography has taken him around the globe to shoot assignments and build images for each of his books, Andy Katz has not only found his niche, but has risen to the top of that vertical market. Accomplished in many types of photography, Katz is most often known for his worldwide documentation of all things wine. Living in Sonoma Valley for the past ten years, for decades he’s been shooting and publishing some of the most arresting scenes of vineyards and wine production. We recently had the opportunity to discuss photography, tripods, and, of course, wine.

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

In high school he worked in a White Plains, New York camera store. After graduation, he attended the Art Center College of Design to study photography. Leaving to turn pro, he relocated to Boulder, Colorado, and opened a studio focusing on the ski industry. Shooting an album cover for Dan Fogelberg led to a spate of work for the music industry, including album covers for other artists.

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

Katz moved to Los Angeles in 1977 to specialize in music industry photography. Eventually faced with having to sign another one-year contract with a record company, Katz realized he no longer wanted to be in L.A., so he returned to Boulder, where he lived a total of 32 years. A friend owned a restaurant showcasing American wine, and gave Katz an assignment: fly to Napa and Sonoma to photograph the wine industry for eight days. “I fell in love with the place,” he recalls. “I really liked the photos I got. They were framed large format in a studio-style for this restaurant, and they looked great. I went back to Napa and showed some images to the wineries, and I got several jobs.”

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

One job turned into another, and Katz built up his library of photos from both valleys until he created his first book, A Portrait of Napa and Sonoma. The book was well-received. “It got me my start in the book biz,” he says. Since then, he’s gone on to publish Vineyard, The Heart of Burgundy, Burgundy and Its Wines, Robert Mondavi Winery, Tuscany and Its Wines, and Concannon: : The First One Hundred and Twenty-Five Years, among others. His latest title, New Zealand: Sea, Earth, Sky, is available on his site. A book on India is forthcoming, and a new book on Sonoma with an introduction by James Laube is heading to the printer this month.

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

Katz shoots all-digital these days, and his main camera body is a Sony Alpha 900. “There are certain things I miss about film,” he says. “I’m convinced in years to come these software geniuses will be able to figure out ways to recreate everything I like that film does better than digital. Digital brings it up a notch. I’m shooting a 35mm digital camera now that has equal quality to 6 x 7 film.”

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

“I use a tripod often,” Katz says. “There’s so much you can do with a tripod that you absolutely cannot do without one. When people are starting out in photography, it’s essential. It slows them down and lets them observe what’s in the viewfinder, as opposed to shoot first, focus second, and compose third,” he says, laughing. As far as tripods go, he’s well-covered. “I now have three Induro tripods I use,” he reports. “For travel, I’ve got the C114. When I’m not shlepping, I’ve got the C413, and I’ve got one in my car that’s in between. I’ve been a big advocate for tripods for a long time.”

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

When asked what younger photographers are missing by not using a tripod, Katz is quick to list his thoughts. “First, it slows down what you’re doing and it makes you think. Anything that makes you think is good. With digital technology, things are so simple. Pixels are free, so no one’s worried about shooting too much. There’s a machine gun mentality of overshooting and not thinking enough. What a tripod does is it makes you stop, think, and look more carefully at what you want in the frame and what you don’t. That, to me, is the key of composition.”

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

“Using a tripod allows you to take photos where you couldn’t do it without a tripod,” Katz reiterates. “If you’re shooting in gorgeous light which is very low—and that’s my favorite light to shoot in—and you want some depth of field, you’re going to be shooting at two or three seconds, and there’s no way you can do that without a tripod. I often tell people the tripod and the ball head you choose are going to be two of the most important decisions you’re going to make photographically.”

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

Keep an eye out for his forthcoming books, which Katz shot with the help of his Induro tripods. “Using one is a piece of cake,” he says. “They’re very well designed. They’re light because of the carbon fiber. You just do a quarter of a turn and everything pops in or out. I’ve had mine in rain, sleet, salt, dirt, dust, grime… I put these things through hell. I just wipe them down with a little water and they’re fine.”

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

After all the years of photographing vineyards and spending time with winemakers, the bug has bitten Katz, too. This year will see the release of a new venture for him: his own wine. Called AJE, it’s 100% Alexander Valley cabernet. “It’s wonderful,” Katz glows, just like his photos of the region.

©Andy Katz

©Andy Katz

Andy Katz Photography

In Tim Wolcott’s Genes, Part One

Posted in Location Photography, Long Exposures, Outdoor Photography, Photoshop, landscape photography on March 8th, 2010 by Ron Egatz – 2 Comments Tags: , ,

Few photographers with a better pedigree come to mind when you think of Tim Wolcott’s. He’s a descendant of Alexander S. Wolcott, who, on May 8, 1840, was granted United States Patent Number 1582. It’s a patent for a “method of taking likenesses by means of a concave reflector and plates so prepared as that luminous or other rays will act thereon.” In other words, it’s a camera. It also happens to be the first American patent issued for photography.

Alexander Wolcott was born in 1804, and was known as a New York daguerreotype artist. His camera patent is the first one which used a concave mirror to reflect light onto the photographic plate, instead of lenses. This reduced the achingly-long exposure times common of the era’s technology, although people being photographed with Wolcott’s invention were still recommended to have “some suitable support for [his] head attached to enable him to remain perfectly still.”

If you felt that wasn’t impressive enough bragging rights for a photographer to boast these days, Tim can also thank Alexander for opening the first portrait studio in March of 1840, and organizing the first photo exhibit held in Washington, D.C. Other photographic Wolcotts of note include Marion Post Wolcott, best known for for the photographs she took during the Great Depression which documented the poverty and desperation of the rural poor, and Horace Wolcott, frontier photographer who died on the job, with most of his photos now lost. Photography is in the Wolcott lineage, and Tim Wolcott is a fine addition to the family passion.

©Tim Wolcott. This image was shot for the development of the pigment inkjet technology. I was asked to go and shoot some images that would really give the inkjet a challenge. This image was used to make the very first pigment inkjet photograph. The image was scouted the night before and shot at first light. Shot with a 8x10 camera 1 second at f/32."

©Tim Wolcott. This image was shot for the development of the pigment inkjet technology. I was asked to go and shoot some images that would really give the inkjet a challenge. This image was used to make the very first pigment inkjet photograph. The image was scouted the night before and shot at first light. Shot with a 8x10 camera 1 second at f/32."

An Iowa native, Tim grew up with a tornado room in his home doubling as a darkroom. The family moved to Wisconsin, where he took art and photography in his senior year of high school. That year he won a blue ribbon and a Gold Key Award in an Eastman Kodak competition. “That changed my life,” recalls Wolcott. “I decided instead of researching nature, I’d photograph nature and landscape.”

After high school, Wolcott moved to California, where, at Santa Monica College, he studied under George Phillips, master black and white printer and friend of Ansel Adams. At this time, Wolcott was also working for fashion photographer Bruce Weber. Wolcott entered a photo in a Carmel photographic competition. The judges mistook the photo for an Ansel Adams photo. When he won, he was introduced to the master himself.

©Tim Wolcott. "This image was created by the Dogwood exactly where I wanted the blossoms to appear in relationship to the waterfall. I chose the fixed focal length 80mm at 3 sec. With the depth of field, I had everything in focus except I dropped the focus out just before it reached the cliff. This allowed the dogwood to seperate itself from the background making the image to become very three-dimensional looking. I study Asian folding screens and tapestries. My goal was to create a very elegant image. It took 65 images shot in row to capture two images I knew would be tack sharp."

©Tim Wolcott. "This image was created by aligning the Dogwood exactly where I wanted the blossoms to appear in relationship to the waterfall. I chose the fixed focal length 80mm at 3 sec. With the depth of field, I had everything in focus except I dropped the focus out just before it reached the cliff. This allowed the dogwood to seperate itself from the background making the image to become very three-dimensional looking. I study Asian folding screens and tapestries. My goal was to create a very elegant image. It took 65 images shot in row to capture two images I knew would be tack sharp."

Wolcott credits his grandfather, Harry Wolcott, with starting him on his path to become a landscape photographer. “In the Midwest, one of the things you do in spring is go out and look for morels, a kind of mushroom,” he explains. This and other outdoor activities helped instill a love of nature in him.

©Tim Wolcott. "This image was used to invent the process called Evercolor. This image was used to make the very first green photograph ever made. Due to the rich colors and unique contrast, the image was the perfect image to see how the process was developing. The image was shot in Anza Borrego in the spring of 1991 with 4x5 camera 1/2 sec at f/45."

©Tim Wolcott. "This image was used to invent the process called Evercolor. This image was used to make the very first green photograph ever made. Due to the rich colors and unique contrast, the image was the perfect image to see how the process was developing. The image was shot in Anza Borrego in the spring of 1991 with 4x5 camera 1/2 sec at f/45."

Wolcott began his career shooting black and white. In 1985 he started his work with color film, but didn’t change his subject matter or shooting style. Citing Brett Weston and Ansel Adams as his favorite photographers, Wolcott naturally found himself emulating them. “If you were going to be shooting black and white,” he says, “you were going to be compared to the great ones before us. A great color image is really a black and white image in disguise. The color just had to be perfect. Color is very misunderstood. Technically, they’re much more difficult than black and white. I’ve done both. The lighting can be perfect, the composition can be perfect, but if you have too many reds on one side of an image, then you have really poor color composition. If the colors are dull, it doesn’t become very luminous, like in a black and white image. This is why the power of color is so difficult.”

©Tim Wolcott. In the River's Path. "Taken in New Hampshire, during the storm of the century for the state. I noticed a waterfall jetting out of the mountain above, while looking for it I came across this amazing scene. The floods create a curtain of water behind this ancient boulder that has with stood the floods for eons of time. The boulder is protecting these trees from the waters. Shot with a Mamiya camera at 16sec at f/32."

©Tim Wolcott. In the River's Path. "Taken in New Hampshire, during the storm of the century for the state. I noticed a waterfall jetting out of the mountain above, while looking for it I came across this amazing scene. The floods create a curtain of water behind this ancient boulder that has with stood the floods for eons of time. The boulder is protecting these trees from the waters. Shot with a Mamiya camera at 16sec at f/32."

In terms of style, Wolcott says he’s influenced by every photographer who came before him. “I study photography and paintings twenty to thirty hours a week. Both professions are people who study light. George Phillips got me planning and drawing my photographs before I took them. I make notes of things I want to see. I take them with me on location. Today they call it previsualization, but it works, and keeps your creative vision going. Painters do this, too.”

©Tim Wolcott. "This image is called Monet's Palette and was shot at Waldon Pond. This image was shot using a 300mm Mamiya Lens at 12 sec at F/22. I have been creating these Monet inspired images for about ten years. But the ponds need to be designed by the gods in order for them to really look like they were painted. In fact they painted by light being filtered thru the trees in the early morning during the fall."

©Tim Wolcott. "This image is called Monet's Palette and was shot at Waldon Pond. This image was shot using a 300mm Mamiya Lens at 12 sec at F/22. I have been creating these Monet inspired images for about ten years. But the ponds need to be designed by the gods in order for them to really look like they were painted. In fact they painted by light being filtered thru the trees in the early morning during the fall."

To say Wolcott works hard to achieve his images can’t be overstated. Along with drawing photos before he takes them, he often relies on techniques invented with the advent of the camera. “I’m looking for structure, I’m looking for trees. Nature is about finding perfection in chaos. You have to put those little pieces together. Framing cards are something sorely overlooked. It’s just a four by five hole in a card. They did this in the old days to compose their images perfectly, but also to redefine their compositions. If you look through the hole and it’s eight inches away from your eye, that’s a composition for a 210mm lens. It speeds up your process very quickly. I now carry four different cards: a square format, a four by five, and two panoramic framing cards. Ansel Adams did this. You get to show exactly what you want in the shot, the height of your camera, everything, and you do this with your eye, not the camera. Then you mimic that vision with the camera and pick the focal length that matches that exactly. Then it’s just a matter of waiting for the light to get to be the way you want it.”

©Tim Wolcott. "Soon after I got my new Phase One Camera system I traveled to the Escalante area in Utah to get used to my camera before I took my annual photo trip to New England for the fall shoot. I wanted to work any bugs out here before I went on my 24 day trip. The fall had not really taken place yet except for this little valley. I have been scouting this area for several years, and always missed this location because it turns two weeks before the rest of the mountain. It's good to know the area before the prime time shooting happens. The image took just over six hours before the beams got really strong. Some photographers drove by several times and finally stopped and asked what I was waiting for. I told them I was watching how the light lit up the trees and cliffs. I was waiting for the light to hit. They said, 'That could take all day.' I promptly said, 'This is like the gods are speaking to me and patience will pay off.' Shot P45 with 80mm at f/22 at 1 sec."

©Tim Wolcott. "Soon after I got my new Phase One Camera system I traveled to the Escalante area in Utah to get used to my camera before I took my annual photo trip to New England for the fall shoot. I wanted to work any bugs out here before I went on my 24 day trip. The fall had not really taken place yet except for this little valley. I have been scouting this area for several years, and always missed this location because it turns two weeks before the rest of the mountain. It's good to know the area before the prime time shooting happens. The image took just over six hours before the beams got really strong. Some photographers drove by several times and finally stopped and asked what I was waiting for. I told them I was watching how the light lit up the trees and cliffs. I was waiting for the light to hit. They said, 'That could take all day.' I promptly said, 'This is like the gods are speaking to me and patience will pay off.' Shot P45 with 80mm at f/22 at 1 sec."

Wolcott’s images do not come easily, and he’s quite clear the speed and ease of use of digital formats has erased established techniques he relies on every day. “The disciplines are what’s being lost today in photography,” he says. “People want things done easily, and that’s a mistake. Visions need to be captured as they’re seen. If you don’t have the discipline and the passion to make the shot happen, you’re not going to get it. This wild approach of shooting hundreds of photos where you’re just praying you’re gonna get one usable image—that’s fine for sports and wildlife and other moving images, but landscape is a personal and intimate time. You’re waiting for nature to get perfect, and it usually only happens for a very short time. I’ve waited up to six hours in one location for that light to go exactly where I want it to. I usually wait at least two hours. You don’t just walk upon a scene and shoot it.”

©Tim Wolcott. Serenity of the Falls. "This is one of my favorite places. This image was scouted the day before and when we showed up first thing in the morning before the sun rose. The waterfall on the right of the image had developed from the rains of the nighttime. This image has grace and power in the same shot. The waterfalls of Pennsylvania are amazing and spectacular. We are planning doing some workshops here."

©Tim Wolcott. Serenity of the Falls. "This is one of my favorite places. This image was scouted the day before and when we showed up first thing in the morning before the sun rose. The waterfall on the right of the image had developed from the rains of the nighttime. This image has grace and power in the same shot. The waterfalls of Pennsylvania are amazing and spectacular. We are planning doing some workshops here."

Not only must a photographer have patience and apply a thoughtful methodology to shooting as he does, but Wolcott also contends with the wildest uncontrollable force on the planet: nature, and in particular, weather. “Wind is a big enemy in shooting landscapes,” he says. “Great lighting is typically very low lighting. If you’re standing in a forest, it’s often twelve stops of light. I shoot with a Phase One camera, so I can carry twelve stops of light. There’s times when I have to wait two hours because the tree bark is extra dark and the dogwood blossoms are extra white. I don’t want either one of those to blow out. You do have to wait to get these perfect. You’re waiting for everything to get perfect, including the wind. My average shutter speed is six or eight seconds. For nature to hold steady that long, it’s got to be a pretty amazing day.”

©Tim Wolcott. Mono Lake Sunrise. "Shot at 4 sec at f/64 using Nikkor superwide 90mm on a 4x5 zone VI camera. This is my very first shot in color. I scouted this image the night before and woke up before sunrise in the winter. I climbed into the water and set the shot up early so the water would be calm before the sun started to rise."

©Tim Wolcott. Mono Lake Sunrise. "Shot at 4 sec at f/64 using Nikkor superwide 90mm on a 4x5 zone VI camera. This is my very first shot in color. I scouted this image the night before and woke up before sunrise in the winter. I climbed into the water and set the shot up early so the water would be calm before the sun started to rise."

Finding the areas he wants to shoot in requires just as much prep work as the actual photography. “When I scout a forest, I create a grid,” says Wolcott. “You find the right trees with the right backdrop, you figure out where the light is going. If I’m shooting something like dogwood trees, we’re scouting that five or six weeks in advance. Then it’s a wait for the tree to get perfect, and hope nature cooperates. Typically, if the sun is up, there’s wind. If the sun is hitting the atmosphere and there’s shadowy areas and bright areas, it creates its own wind.”

©Tim Wolcott. Dogwood in the Moonlight. "Taken in the Smokey Mountains National Park. Shot with a 4x5 camera Taken at night time for 8 minutes at f/22. The tree was spotted earlier in the day, but it lacked excitement. So I came back at 5:15 am in morning so the moths would not be out and disturb my photograph. Using two flashlight to help me focut the camera, I quickly set up and captured this elegant tree in the moonlight."

©Tim Wolcott. Dogwood in the Moonlight. "Taken in the Smokey Mountains National Park. Shot with a 4x5 camera Taken at night time for 8 minutes at f/22. The tree was spotted earlier in the day, but it lacked excitement. So I came back at 5:15 am in morning so the moths would not be out and disturb my photograph. Using two flashlight to help me focut the camera, I quickly set up and captured this elegant tree in the moonlight."

Wolcott applies tried and true techniques, but he’s not a luddite. “People rely too much on technology to solve their problems,” he says. “They’ll think, ‘Photoshop will fix it.’ This is what they’re being taught. Is Photoshop a great tool? Of course it is. Would Ansel Adams be using it? Of course he would, but it has to be used in discipline. It can’t be used as an end-all, fix-all. Getting your composition, picking the right depth of field for your shot, picking the right angle, choosing the right focal length of your camera, and then, of course, you’re waiting for the light to be perfect. All of these elements Photoshop cannot fix. If that’s 95% of a photograph, what’s it actually fixing? Yes, you can get rid of litter you can’t remove from the middle of a lake, or other things humans do to our environment to make it look ugly. It can do dodging and burning in color, which you couldn’t do before easily. It takes a lot of discipline to make a photograph as perfect as possible beforehand.”

©Tim Wolcott.

©Tim Wolcott. "This image was created first by seeing the image while looking through a framing card. It was shot while standing upon a giant fallen Sequoia tree about 14 feet off the ground. While I could have shot this image in one frame it would have been a small file. I chose to shoot this by stitching seven images consecutively shot at 5.5 sec a piece. I had to shoot the image right to left since the cloud that is engulfing the forest was moving that direction and I needed to have the same light throughout the image. Shot with a P45 Phase One Camera back, Mamiya AFD camera on a Induro Tripod."

Although mostly known for his stunning landscapes, Wolcott shot a 2007 project in Antarctica. “I come from the old world,” Wolcott explains, “where a good sturdy tripod and camera are critical. Suddenly I was shooting handheld from a Zodiac, which is moving on the water. Your problem then isn’t the wind, it’s the movement of the boat or your shutter speed. By using the histogram, I could tell there’s no true black in the shot, so I pushed the histogram toward the dark, which sped up my shutter speed by two stops. Since I only needed fifteen feet to infinity, with nothing in front of that, I used hyperfocal distance, and set my camera like the old World War II photographers, and I was able to get my shutter speed up another two stops. That’s significant: I was shooting at 1/180th of a second to 1/220th of second, handheld from a Zodiac. You can only do that with fixed focal length lenses.”

©Tim Wolcott. Parthenon.  "This image was shot from a Zodiac, using a Phase system. Hand held triple stitched at 1/220th sec at f/11. This amazing piece of ice was made some 10,000 plus years ago but the carving on the ice happened in a very short period of time by rising and lowering of the tides. I got the driver of the Zodiac to position the boat right where I wanted it to be. The soft light allowed me to capture all the detail of the Iceberg. Shot in Antarctica in a place called Graveyard of the Icebergs. The iceberg collasped that night in big storm."

©Tim Wolcott. Parthenon. "This image was shot from a Zodiac, using a Phase system. Hand held triple stitched at 1/220th sec at f/11. This amazing piece of ice was made some 10,000 plus years ago but the carving on the ice happened in a very short period of time by rising and lowering of the tides. I got the driver of the Zodiac to position the boat right where I wanted it to be. The soft light allowed me to capture all the detail of the Iceberg. Shot in Antarctica in a place called Graveyard of the Icebergs. The iceberg collasped that night in big storm."

Wolcott cut a unique figure on his voyage to Antarctica, particularly among other photographers. Armed with his Induro tripod and frame cards, he was working in ways alien to the other shooters. They questioned why he didn’t start snapping away with the rest of them. His answer? “I told them I’d rather go back with one or two great ones than hundreds of bad ones. Nature can’t be rushed, nor can a great photograph be rushed.” We couldn’t agree more.

Watch for the second installment of our profile featuring Tim Wolcott’s revolutionary printing of his new book, Along the Water’s Edge, his history with accurate inkjet printing, his creation of the first green gallery, and more.

Tim Wolcott’s Web site

Along the Water’s Edge

Tim Wolcott’s Advanced Class

Painting with Light: Jarrett Murphy and Tim Simmons

Posted in Location Photography, Long Exposures, Outdoor Photography on July 30th, 2009 by Rachel Hulin – Be the first to comment Tags: , , , ,
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Jarrett Murphy, Route 531, Spencerport, New York, 2008

I saw this picture (above) on Flak Photo the other day and was very impressed. Jarrett Murphy makes long exposures and paints his landscapes with light, creating an almost other-wordly effect. I hadn’t seen this done much, though my buddy Wesley Brown over at We Can Shoot Too alerted me to the brilliance of British photographer Tim Simmons, who uses a similar technique. So today we get two for one!

These images are pretty spectacular- it seems as though a lot of work that would normally done in post are done in camera- the edges are smoothed over, the light glows. You could put a car in there, and voila! An ad!

Below, six from Simmons.

intervention-rockpool-1-2007

Tim Simmons, Intervention Rockpool #1 2007

intervention-rockpool-4-2008

Tim Simmons, Intervention Rockpool #4 2008

intervention-rockpool-7-2008

Tim Simmons, Intervention Rockpool #7 2008

Do you paint with light? Send over some samples!

Ten Fireworks for the Fourth.

Posted in Location Photography, Long Exposures, Outdoor Photography on July 2nd, 2009 by Rachel Hulin – 1 Comment Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Ooooh I’m so excited for our Independence Day! This blogger’s going to Maine, what are you folks up to? I thought it would be fitting to do a little top ten firework picture roundup, as ’tis the season. Plus, what were long exposures made for if not fireworks?

Check out some of these gems, all found on flickr, from firework displays across the globe.

1. photo by Barry Yanowitz

1. photo by Barry Yanowitz

2. photo by Stuck in Customs

2. photo by Stuck in Customs

3. photo by Joe Penniston

3. photo by Joe Penniston

4. photo by Taiva Salla

4. photo by Taiva Salla

5. photo by The Rocketeer

5. photo by The Rocketeer

6. photo by Evets Lembek

6. photo by Evets Lembek

7. photo by Motley Pixel

7. photo by Motley Pixel

8. photo by Timothy K. Hamilton

8. photo by Timothy K. Hamilton

9. photo by Jaako

9. photo by Jaako

10. photo by ttstam

10. photo by ttstam

I dig the tripod. Have a banging holiday, folks!